The I-Programmer team reports a lot of news and originates loads of helpful articles, but there's far more out there than we can possibly cover. So from time to time we trawl through other people's blogs to find posts of interest. This time the focus is Ruby on Rails.

In this post we're going to take a look at some really awesome sites that have been built with Ruby on Rails to inspire you to get coding and build that world-changing business idea you've been talking about!

In setting up for the Treehouse Rails 5 Basics course, we're also updating our installation help workshops to cover Rails 5. We figured we'd share those directions here, as a little nudge to those of you who still haven't discovered how awesome Rails is.

Recently I had to create a simple feature - two factor authentication (2FA) in a Rails application. I began with some quick research to see what is available online, what is recommended, and to think about how it might fit in with our projects at Netguru.

In the last couple of years, we have seen a lot of development in the devops field. It's becoming much easier for developers to provision servers and deploy their applications on those servers just with a couple of key strokes.

For this tutorial we’ll create a two way customer support chat system for a company that wants to directly communicate with their customer not only via their site but also via SMS. The web app will be the interface for the “customer support agent” and powered by Action Cable, while the customers can use their phone to send text messages straight to the support agent.

Even if you're the best Rails developer in the world, you are going to have to debug your code from time to time. With other frameworks, this is a very frustrating process, but that isn't the case with Ruby on Rails.

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TigerGraph has released a cloud version of its graph database. TigerGraph Cloud supports AI and machine learning applications, and was announced at the annual Amazon Web Services Re:Invent conference. [ ... ]